The Nets hang around for three quarters, but Luka and Austin slam the door with a ruthless fourth-quarter burst.
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BKN | 30 | 29 | 25 | 15 | 99 |
| LAL | 35 | 26 | 24 | 31 | 116 |
The Nets keep punching, but the Lakers have the two best shot-makers on the floor when it matters most. After Brooklyn spends most of the night hanging around within striking distance — and even briefly flipping momentum in stretches — Los Angeles detonates in the fourth quarter, turning a one-possession game into a 116-99 statement win.
For three quarters, this one feels competitive enough to stay honest. The Lakers open with a 35-30 first quarter, but Brooklyn refuses to go away. The second quarter gets tricky when the Nets seize a 44-39 lead, only for Los Angeles to rip off a 13-0 burst that flips the game on its head. Luka Dončić gets it started with a 20-foot pull-up jumper to cap the run, and suddenly the Lakers are back in front 51-44. Even then, Brooklyn keeps swinging. The Nets answer with their own 9-0 spurt — highlighted by B. Saraf’s driving layup — to keep the game tight, and by halftime it’s still a two-point Laker edge at 61-59.
The third quarter is even tighter. Brooklyn has one more push in them, and an 8-0 run fuels a brief 77-74 lead. Z. Williams finishes a driving layup off an O. Agbaji assist, and for a moment the Nets have the Lakers chasing. But Los Angeles never lets the game tilt too far. The lead changes and mini-runs give the building enough tension to feel real, and the Lakers answer with discipline instead of panic. By the end of the third, it’s still anyone’s game at 85-84, which sets the stage for the final swing.
Then the fourth quarter belongs to the stars — and the role players who keep feeding them. Brooklyn is still within six at 103-97 when J. Minott buries a 27-foot three at 4:52, but that’s the last time the Nets can truly breathe. T. Mann forces a steal. J. Hayes swats one at the rim, protecting the paint and killing whatever rhythm Brooklyn had left. Then LeBron James attacks downhill for a driving layup at 3:52, pushing the lead to 107-97, and the Lakers start closing the door possession by possession. J. Wilson adds another driving layup, and the final knockout comes in classic Laker fashion: Dončić rises and drills a 27-foot step-back three at 1:29, stretching the margin to 113-99. Austin Reaves follows with his own 28-foot step-back at 0:56.8, and the roof comes off the game.
That closing stretch is the difference between surviving and controlling. Dončić is spectacular throughout, finishing with 41 points, eight rebounds and three assists in 39 minutes while knocking down five threes and shooting 60 percent from the field. He doesn’t just score — he dictates the late-game geometry. Reaves is right there with him, pouring in 26 points, eight boards and five assists, then delivering the final dagger after a night of constant pressure. Hayes gives the Lakers a huge defensive boost with five blocks, and Nolan Traore’s four steals help keep Brooklyn from ever finding a clean late push.
For Brooklyn, the effort is real, but the margin in shot creation eventually shows. The Nets get enough productive stretches to stay attached, but they can’t match the Lakers’ half-court execution once the game gets tight. And that’s the takeaway going forward: Los Angeles looks dangerous when Dončić is controlling the offense and Reaves is hunting space on the perimeter. If this version of the Lakers shows up in the stretch run, they have the shot-making and defensive edge to keep climbing in the West.
Turning Point
The game breaks open when Los Angeles answers a 103-97 fourth-quarter score with a steal, a block, and then LeBron and Dončić hitting back-to-back daggers.
Key Performers
He owns the fourth quarter with a 27-foot step-back dagger and finishes with elite efficiency.
He keeps the offense flowing and seals the game with a deep step-back three in the final minute.
His rim protection swings the closing minutes and helps the Lakers smother Brooklyn’s last stand.
He brings energy and disruption defensively, giving Brooklyn a few extra possessions.
Box Score Leaders
| Player | PTS | REB | AST | 3PM | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luka Dončić | 41 | 8 | 3 | 5 | 41 PTS5 3PM60% FG |
| Austin Reaves | 26 | 8 | 5 | 4 | |
| Jaxson Hayes | 10 | 8 | 1 | 0 | 5 BLK |
| Nolan Traore |